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Ian Carrington, Director of the NIS

Following my last column about the National Insurance Scheme (NIS), several people, who were having problems with that government department, sought my assistance. Today, I would like to share the experience of two persons since the troubles, they were forced to endure to get unemployment benefits, show up fundamental problems with the processes at NIS.

They were informed verbally that they did not qualify for the benefit because the NIS records show that they were not insured under the scheme for a year. Both of them had been working for the same employer from 2013 to July 2017, approximately four years. NIS contributions were deducted from their wages but were not being paid in. As a matter of fact, the employer registered the business some time in 2016 and only started to pay in the contributions to NIS at that time. All along the workers claim that they were not aware that their contributions were not being remitted to NIS.

Every employee, who earns a minimum of $21 per week or $91 per month, is required to pay NIS contributions. Private sector regular employees are supposed to pay 10.1% of their insurable earnings, and the employer is required to pay an additional 11.25% on the worker’s behalf. Section 15 of the National Insurance and Social Security Act mandates the employer to make the deduction and pay the money over to the NIS Fund. The employee has no control over that process and in most cases might not even be aware that the employer has not complied with the law.

My greatest concern is that these workers were told that they were not entitled to receive unemployment benefits since they were not insured for 52 weeks. That information might prove to be correct but it was improper to make that determination and orally communicate the decision to the claimant. Whenever a person makes a claim and it is disallowed, the Director of NIS is required, by Regulation 8 of the National Insurance and Social Security (Determination of Claims and Questions) Regulations 1967, to inform the claimant, in writing, of the decision and also inform him of the right to appeal. From my experience, appeal forms are not readily available and it seems as though officers take offence when their decisions are challenged.

However, if the appropriate procedure were implemented: the claimants would have been able to produce their payslips to show that they were employed for the required period; and that NIS contributions were deducted from their wages, even though that is not absolutely necessary to qualify for the benefit. If the employer failed to pay in the contributions, the claimant only needs to show that he was employed and that he did not make any arrangements with the employer to avoid paying the contributions in order to qualify and receive the benefits.

It is then up the the Director to go after the delinquent employer to recover the contributions. When I worked there in the 1980s that is how we operated, and we did so in compliance with Paragraph 6.(1) of the National Insurance and Social Security (Contributions) Regulations, 1967. It states:

Where a contribution payable by an employer in respect or on behalf of an employed person is paid after the due date or is not paid, and the delay or failure in making payment thereof is shown to the satisfaction of the Board not to have been with the consent or connivance of, or attributable to any negligence on the part of the employed person, the contribution shall, for the purpose of any right to benefit, be treated as paid on the due date.

Arising from this case, I am told by the remaining employees that the employer is making deductions from their wages to recover NIS contributions that were supposedly not deducted when due. Workers should be aware that it is contrary to Regulation 18.(2A) of the Collection of Contributions Regulations to do so. It states:

Any employer who fails to deduct an amount that is required to be deducted from a payment of remuneration to an employee, may not deduct that amount from any subsequent payments of remuneration made to the employee for the pay period for which he had failed to deduct.

Too many workers are being disadvantaged by officers of the NIS department who are unfamiliar with the regulations. Maybe, it would be better if NIS administration require its staff to qualify in its regulations rather that in academic degrees that have no relevance to its operations.


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137 responses to “The Caswell Franklyn Column – National Insurance Staff not Sufficiently Trained to Administer Scheme”


  1. The share price would redound to a cash strapped government. Government did nothing to protect the minority shareholders because it needed a injection of cash urgently.

    My concerns are more basic. I did not say in the column but one of the persons who consulted is illiterate. He depended on NIS staff to help him but instead their incompetence ended up putting him at a severe disadvantage.

    Sent from my iPad


  2. @Caswell

    Believe it or not we (BU,Alien et al) are on the battlefield with you. We are fighting to ensure maximum yield on investment and you that that investment yield which translates to benefit is paid promptly.


  3. Why is privatisation through the sale of a percentage of the ownership in viable government operations not being seriously discussed as a means of securing funds to reduce the debt. This could be done with an option to repurchase the shares within a set time period subject to the guarantee of a set return to the investors. This and listing the resulting companies on the exchange would allow the full value of the operations to be realised as major investors seek to increase their interests. If government is happy after the set time period that the new companies are operating in a satisfactory manner and adequately controlled by regulations, the investors could be allowed to retain their ownership interests and the government continue with a less that 100% ownership.


  4. Caswell just does not have the ability to see the REAL picture. His ‘smaller picture’ of little brass bowls foraging for food for their tables is the PRECISE recipe for poverty, despair and hopelessness.
    Caswell’s approach is to try pushing his finger into the hole in sewerage Dam ..while calling on Jeff, David and Bushie to jump in and plug other leaks with their appendages…

    BUT NOT STINKING BUSHIE…

    The REAL solution is not about fighting rearguard actions, against petty clerks who give poor people the run-around …AS INSTRUCTED.
    …it is about vigilance of the original funds deposit.
    …it is about auditing the investments, share purchases and sales..
    …about auditing and controlling the loans to gold clubs…
    ABOUT BEING OWNERS….

    How the hell do you show NO INTEREST when C&W investments are allowed to literally burn… and then make a fuss about some BB who is looking for free money between jobs -while liming on the damn block?

    @ Jeff
    Bushie, the draftsperson is a mere amanuensis or scribe, following instructions. The policy is determined by the political class that you and others put in a position to so do!
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    See that!!!
    You making mock sport at Bushie…. again!!

    First thing … what the hell is an amanuensis?
    It that different TO …or different FROM …a Hal Gollop?

    Boss, you know, (and Bushie knows )… that our politicians are SO damn dumb, that wunna lawyers could draft the song “Baa baa black sheep” starring a pig ..and our shiite-hound politicians would still be looking for wool…. four bags full.

    Case in point is the recent ‘CCJ overturn’ in the Selby case.
    Wuh even Hal Austin could have seen that HUGE gap in the law – with the failure to define what ‘single’ means in that legislation…. poor drafting…. not intent.

    ..of course, since Hal wasted his wife’s hard-earned money on that time-share scam in Bim, he has had to keep his little donkey quiet and may well have missed it..


  5. Normally, if Cable & Wireless is listed on the stock exchange, then the value of shares will depend on the market.
    NIS can offer its equity holdings to any would-be buyer any part of the world.


  6. The traded price on the exchange is not necessarily the fair value. A good example of fair value would be if C&W had made a bid as in the case of Banks Holdings and a Digicel with equal sophistication decided to make an offer to C&W and other shareholders for 100% of the shares, to which C&W was motivated to counter with a real fair value offer beyond which Digicel with equal knowledge would not go due to a higher offer being more than the true worth of the shares. This is why the NIS, with its $5 billion portfolio, should have put together a group of major investors to get the best value for its investment.


  7. When an individual, minority shareholder makes an investment, the return being sought is not the value of the investment to himself, but the value to a major investor with the resources to realise the full potential of the underlying company.


  8. The market determines fair value. A management buy-out, or a share buy back do not determine fair value. A majority/minority share holder offering about market rates for shares says more about their ultimate intentions than it does about the true value of the equity.
    People over pay for share for all kinds of reasons, including the intention to take a company private.
    More important, questions should be asked about the reasons why NIS wants to sell in a major digital company, when the future of business is digital? Share prices aside, what good reason is there for selling?
    In simple terms the firm can be valued by dividing the market valuation by the number of shares.
    Personally, I would prefer if the NIS shares were transferred in to a newly formed Sovereign Wealth Fund.


  9. An EFFICIENT market determines fair value. That we do not have in Barbados.


  10. Hal

    That would be a sovereign poverty fund. You don’t realise that this Government has impoverished this country to the point that the family silver is up for sale to meet current expenditure. Unfortunately, we can only sell an asset once. What happens when you need more money- Bush (Tea) Hill.

    Sent from my iPad


  11. When an individual investor buys shares, two things come top of the list: the dividend and the share valuation. The value of shares to institutions should not be of concern to any individual investor.
    The full potential of the company is determined by: the market it is in; its major competitors; the quality of the management; the quality of the board; their medium and long-term plans; and the quality of its research and development.
    Pension scheme should take in to consideration its medium and long-term liabilities (ie future pensions) and the likelihood that the company can meet those obligations in future.
    Look at the best managed US (Calpers) and Canadian pension scheme, or the Yale Endowment Fund for the way to manage bulk funds.
    While you are at it have a look at the Singapore Central Provident Fund for a workable compulsory saving scheme.


  12. Caswell,
    I realise the state or public finances and had this discussion with the late David Thompson before his premature death. But I believe the glass is half full, you seem to think it is half empty (or even empty already). Things can be rescued with good ideas and management.


  13. @Alien

    Correct!

    Anyone familiar with the BSE is all too aware how the ‘club’ manipulates share price which as you say is not related to true value. The BL&P and BNB deals are good examples.

    @Caswell

    Note the NIS was a significant shareholder in these companies.


  14. All markets (US, UK, EU) are asymmetrical. Eugene Fama and the Chicago School’s models of financial economics got it wrong


  15. Caswell, as a union leader, this is your area as well. The partial privatisation is not intended to be the overall solution. That is to secure funds to reduce the debt and the debt servicing. You have to also appreciate that no entity can continue to pay for a good or service that it does not receive – such action equates to flushing money down the toilet. Therefore, in cooperation with the unions, productive civil servants should be identified and retained and the others allowed to pursue other interests that are consistent with their work ethic.


  16. “Hal Austin September 24, 2017 at 12:58 PM # When an individual investor buys shares, two things come top of the list: the dividend and the share valuation. The value of shares to institutions should not be of concern to any individual investor…”

    Are you saying that the value of shares to institutions does not affect the share valuation that is at the top of the list for an individual investor?


  17. What I am saying is that as an individual investor you know how much money you have to invest and what returns you are looking for. Then you do the usual due diligence: type of firm, quality of management etc.
    If, for example, I bought shares in Apple, I am only interested in the history of dividend payments and the valuation of the company, etc. I do not care if the Dubai Investment Authority has investments in the company, unless it impacts on the management style. That is something that could be dealt with at the annual meeting.
    A good way for people to get practice on share buying – apart from the theory – is by forming an investment club with friends and relatives, setting out strict rules, and they can use the monthly subscriptions to buy shares in listed companies.
    There are listing rules so small cartels cannot easily get together and rob investors. Of course you get dishonest people in all walks of life, but you can sort them out.
    A bigger problem in Barbados is handing money over to fund managers who do what they like with your money and you do not have any comeback. One or two of them look dangerously like Ponzi schemes.


  18. ”’The full potential of the company is determined by: the market it is in; its major competitors; the quality of the management; the quality of the board; their medium and long-term plans; and the quality of its research and development.”’

    =============================================================================

    What bollocks!

    The items above are of secondary importance in share valuation.

    The more important metrics are – does the company have patents, copyrights, unique industrial processes, innovative delivery systems, monopolies, government guarantees, etc. These are the hard value inputs.

    These are the enduring elements which are the best indicators of relative share value.

    The shiite that the perennial idiot in England is talking about can all be managed depending on the willingness of an enterprise to increase management expenditures.

    And are only within the second tier of consideration. Not primary to stock valuation metrics

    David, again this idiot is misleading the blog.

    You should ask yourself why people like Butch Stewart and others constantly seek these from government.


  19. David

    These people get us tired

    Always taking shiite about things they knows not of

    Maybe he Googles this because nobody could be this ignorant about so many things for so long, except Chad.

    And everything he writes about is the same. We can never recall this here writer, Halton Austin, saying anything here that mek sense, cents!


  20. But yet he presumes to give advice to people who have done these things.


  21. Hal Austin cannot think for himself

    Then why should anybody here even consider anything he says to be correct.


  22. “Bush Tea September 24, 2017 at 9:41 AM # – @ Alien Boss, you MUST be from outer space in truthโ€ฆ”

    Mars to be precise, but you are not going to believe that.


  23. @ Caswell
    What happens when you need more money- Bush (Tea) Hill.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    That was low Caswell…

    ..touchรฉ!!


  24. LOL @ Pacha

    Bushie here ‘deading wid laff’ at the lotta shiite Hal spewing out – trying to impress Caswell.

    Mind you (as the same Caswell is wont to say) this is the SAME HAL who ‘invested some of his wife’s money in shares (a Time Share) in Barbados… that not only did NOT pay any dividends, but which transaction can be said to have ‘CLICOed’ his donkey… losing his spouse’s money in the process -not to mention her dignity when he later came on BU and used t as an example of his financial brilliance.

    LOL
    The next shiite we will see on BU is Vincent giving us advice on how to avoid the pitfalls that come with being a multi-millionaire playboy….

    With David(BU) there seems to be no boundaries….
    Except that there MUST be… cause both angela and Carson seems to have left the grounds…

    @ Alien
    Mars to be precise, but you are not going to believe that.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    What’s up …neighbour..!!


  25. @ Caswell
    What happens when you need more money- Bush (Tea) Hill.
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    That was low Caswellโ€ฆ

    ..touchรฉ!!

    What are friends for?

    Sent from my iPad


  26. Bushie

    I hope you know that Hal isn’t going to buy anything else from you.

    Sent from my iPad


  27. The risible Bush Tea again turning everything in to a cheap joke to hide his ignorance. I suggest Bush Tea should follow his pal and let off his steam to make up for his shortcomings. BushTea, act your age. Had you been at school in my time I would have slapped your head something rotten.


  28. Actually Hal, if you were a normal logical person, you would see that the ‘risible Bushie’ produced the cheap joke in order to EXPOSE YOUR ignorance….not to hide his….
    Bushie operates a whacker boss – ignorance is allowed….
    Think the bushman is a financial journalist or some big-up shiite?

    Just wanted everyone to know that this London – based financial journalist, and international economics guru.. just happens to be a piss poor pathetic patsy…. and not even smart enough to keep it in the family (not the BU family…) … or to use a pseudonym.

    If you had slapped Bushie’s head you would now be dead like the other chap who attempted to… and we would be spared the levity of your London-based ‘expertise’….
    Thank God that you did not….


  29. Bushie Tea,
    I would like to go back in time and watch you as you enter the school gate. My hands at e already perspiring from the slaps. I see you are now manufacturing a straw man: I am no guru, no economic guru; I can just about write my name and count to ten. But I can slap silly little boys hard.
    But keep proving that you wasted your youth. You at e the Joe Tudor of the blog.


  30. Less than 7% local equities and less than 15% total equities seem low for the NIS investment portfolio. Professor Robinson should consider taking on more risk, provided that he and the NIS would be prepared to defend the investments in the boardrooms and the market. When the NIS Chairman or Director, backed by $5 billion and the state, turns up for a directors’ meeting, even the company’s chairman should be uncomfortable.


  31. … unlike directors that get a pick because of relationships and must follow the chairman’s lead.


  32. Alien,
    You are right. Before investing the NIS investment board should be having meetings with the target companies, talking through all their plans, the market, both regionally and globally, and the immediate future and looking at the quality of management.
    I will give an example: I worked for a firm that was on the market; during the period it was under consideration, senior management got locked in with new contracts and the would-be owners came round and had meetings with all the key personnel. Afterall, they were going to invest in these people. You do not want to invest in a company then all the key people resign.
    I also think the NIS should do its own research, rather than depend on buying in research. It is a pension fund, so high-risk investments may be a gamble too far. You only get high returns if you gamble.
    I have proposed a reasonably cautious allocation as: 40 per cent fixed income (to meet liabilities), 30 per cent equities (to grow the fund), five per cent hedge funds (high risk, high returns), five per cent cash (keeps you in the market), 15 per cent commercial property (goo regular income from rental), and five per cent an incubation fund or in ETFs (invest in the future).
    That can be tweaked according to performance and the business cycle. It also excludes government using the fund as a piggy bank.
    But, again, I would prefer to see all this taking place within a Sovereign Wealth Fund, with the NIS having a substantial equity holding, with a block on active fund management..


  33. A degree means the holder has the capacity & discipline to learn. Unlike Franklyn’s tenure, NIS has a large staff. The onus is therefore on the organization to have orientation sessions for its staff. This would give them the opportunity to be aware & where necessary learn the law relevant to their jobs. Appears NIS have yet to retool & restructure its operations

  34. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger. Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger.

    Caswell…….,to make your thankless job even shorter, make sure all your clients, union members and nonmembers and ALL the vulnerable people in Barbados who have had and are having their basic human rights violated as a matter of course by two stupid black governments, have a list of their rights and the knowledge that they can make some noise.

    When bloggers can blatantly disregard the rights of the black majority on a public forum..

    ……..and all you ever hear is government repeatedly violating the rights of the black population….

    ……despite most of the government ministers and opposition being lawyers……

    ……and despite they all knowing that Barbados IS a signatory to all these treaties against human rights abuses and violations…….

    …..AND that the laws against such violations do exist….one gets tired and when one is like me, tend to do something about it, besides talk.

    Many Bajans are not aware that they have universal human rights that are inalienable and irreversible, ย maybe it’s time for the Black majority population in Barbados to research those rights under universal and international laws and if they realize their rights have been and still are being violated by the two uncaring black governments when they allowed a minority population of people to violate the majority’s rights for the last 50 years for financial gain, the people should know they also have a right do something about it, to expose any violations of their international human rights and seek redress.

    Appendix 5:ย 
    The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (abbreviated)ย 

    Article 1 Right to Equality
    Article 2 Freedom from Discrimination
    Article 3 Right to Life, Liberty, Personal Security
    Article 4 Freedom from Slavery
    Article 5 Freedom from Torture and Degrading Treatment
    Article 6 Right to Recognition as a Person before the Law
    Article 7 Right to Equality before the Law
    Article 8 Right to Remedy by Competent Tribunal
    Article 9 Freedom from Arbitrary Arrest and Exile
    Article 10 Right to Fair Public Hearing
    Article 11 Right to be Considered Innocent until Proven Guilty
    Article 12 Freedom from Interference with Privacy, Family, Home and Correspondence
    Article 13 Right to Free Movement in and out of the Country
    Article 14 Right to Asylum in other Countries from Persecution
    Article 15 Right to a Nationality and the Freedom to Change It
    Article 16 Right to Marriage and Family
    Article 17 Right to Own Property
    Article 18 Freedom of Belief and Religion
    Article 19 Freedom of Opinion and Information
    Article 20 Right of Peaceful Assembly and Association
    Article 21 Right to Participate in Government and in Free Elections
    Article 22 Right to Social Security
    Article 23 Right to Desirable Work and to Join Trade Unions
    Article 24 Right to Rest and Leisure
    Article 25 Right to Adequate Living Standard
    Article 26 Right to Education
    Article 27 Right to Participate in the Cultural Life of Community
    Article 28 Right to a Social Order that Articulates this Document
    Article 29 Community Duties Essential to Free and Full Development
    Article 30 Freedom from State or Personal Interference in the above Rights

  35. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ Hal Austin at 4 : 33 PM

    Your Investment guidelines are a good starting point. But in view of the rather shallow stock market in Barbados, where are you going to find these equities?

    You also talk about corporations sharing their strategic plans etc. with your investment manager. Does this not amount to insider trading ? This appears to me to be making the small market “asymmetrical”. Is that not so?


  36. Bernard,
    The market is the global market. Investing in a single market is bad strategy, as you know. Investors talking to the executives of the firms they are thinking of investing in is not insider trading, but good due diligence. It is routine, which is why most leading firms (the S&P 500) have investor relations officers.
    All markets are asymmetrical, yes, you are spot on.


  37. @Bernard

    You are aware that successive governments have taken a position to not prop up foreign economies by investing overseas. We can disagree but that has been their position. If you check the investment portfolio mix it under both political parties it has always hover around 70%.

  38. millertheanunnaki Avatar

    @ Hal Austin September 24, 2017 at 4:33 PM
    โ€œI have proposed a reasonably cautious allocation as: 40 per cent fixed income (to meet liabilities), 30 per cent equities (to grow the fund), five per cent hedge funds (high risk, high returns), five per cent cash (keeps you in the market), 15 per cent commercial property (goo regular income from rental), and five per cent an incubation fund or in ETFs (invest in the future).
    That can be tweaked according to performance and the business cycle. It also excludes government using the fund as a piggy bank.
    But, again, I would prefer to see all this taking place within a Sovereign Wealth Fund, with the NIS having a substantial equity holding, with a block on active fund management..โ€

    Man Hal, why don’t you “Up De Ting” and put your โ€˜know-it-all mouthโ€™ to good nationally loyal use?

    Why not return to Barbados and show the locals how things are done in the big investment world in the City of London? Or are you just another limey blabbermouth of the armchair critic-in-the-Diaspora variety?

    Do you really think that the NIS which disposed of its investments in the countryโ€™s lone power generation and distribution guaranteed profitable business (BL&P) given the paucity of alternative investment opportunities would waste its Boardโ€™s time by listening to or even entertaining any proposals made by you; even if done pro bono and with altruistically good intentions?


  39. @Tron September 24, 2017 at 2:40 AM “we need to reduce pensions and other payments by at least 50%. Everybody has the right to emigrate. ”

    The minimum NIS pension is already very small. if it is cut by 50% people will die.

    Your statement “everyone has the right to emigrate” makes no sense. I don’t know of any country which is seeking elderly, disabled, or sick immigrants. Do you?


  40. @David September 24, 2017 at 10:04 AM #
    @Jeff

    What IF there is evidence to point to a BSE consultant who worked on the C&W amalgamation?

    David, you verified this or is it still IF

  41. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David at 1: 23 PM

    Not my experience at all. The BOD of NIS does have enough lassitude to invest abroad in an attempt to achieve geographical diversification. Indeed investment in debentures of fellow CARICOM countries was encouraged at one stage. As I alluded to in another BU blog the growth in GOB bonds could have been a deliberate policy to go after a higher rate of return. I have no inside information.


  42. @Bernard

    You read the letter posted by chairman Robinson which addressed the scarcity of forex to invest overseas as recommended in the actuarial reports?

    You recalled when Jepter Ince was Chairman the policy?

  43. Bernard Codrington. Avatar
    Bernard Codrington.

    @ David @ 5 :37 PM

    You said ” successive governments” not successive chairmen. I know for a fact that there was a substantial foreign investment portfolio, prior to the referenced period.


  44. There is plenty of basic evidence to challenge the C&W “fairness” offer as done by D&T. However, somebody has to file an oppression minority shareholder suit, in order to get access to the documents necessary to render other “opinons”.

    Sagicor is the king-pin of the minority owner group, and I believe Sir Hilary Beckles is their appointed representative on the Board. We all know, going back to the Barbados Mutual, he is well versed in arguing such minority ownership cases. Yet here, there has been silence? Why is nobody challenging that $2.86 offer?


  45. BU’s earlier comment points to why, Sagicor is a big donor.


  46. But who advised C&W to pursue such an oppressive approach? Was it Sir Henry Forde who is listed as Legal Advisor, PwC which is listed as Corporate Advisor or another consultant?


  47. I can confirm that the directors of the International Securities Market, which is operated by the Barbados Stock Exchange, are the below persons, but the Barbados Stock Exchange may have different directors. By the way, I thought that Randall Belgrave was a sitting judge.

    Randall Belgrave (Law Chambers)
    Roger Cave (Fortress)
    Rule Weekes (Cidel)
    Richard Cozier (Formerly Banks Holdings)
    Marlon Yarde (BSE)
    Sir Trevor Carmichael (Chancery Chambers)
    Dr. Patricia Downes-Grant (Sagicor)
    Paul Maxwell (Capita)
    Cleviston Haynes (Central Bank)


  48. @Alien

    Dont get confused the judge is Randall Worrell.


  49. Okay, that resolves my confusion


  50. Okay, was not aware of this gentleman – https://twitter.com/belgraver

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